Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. The Adventures of Tom Sawyer: Chapter 17 Summary & Analysis. Next. Chapter 18. Themes and Colors Key. Summary. Analysis. In St. Petersburg, the townspeople prepare for the funeral to mourn Tom, Joe, and Huck. Their schoolmates tell fond stories about the boys, each one of them trying to tell the story that captures the boys best.

    • Summary—Chapter 14: Happy Camp of The Freebooters
    • Summary—Chapter 15: Tom’s Stealthy Visit Home
    • Summary—Chapter 16: First Pipes—“I’Ve Lost My Knife”
    • Summary—Chapter 17: Pirates at Their Own Funeral
    • Analysis—Chapters 14–17

    The next day, the boys wake on Jackson’s Island and find that their raft has disappeared, but the discovery hardly bothers them. In fact, they find relief in being severed from their last link to St. Petersburg. Huck finds a spring nearby, and the boys go fishing and come up with a bountiful and delicious catch. After breakfast, Tom and Joe explore...

    Tom swims from the end of a sandbar to the nearby Illinois shore and stows away on a ferry to cross back to the Missouri side. At home, Tom finds Aunt Polly, Sid, Mary, and Mrs. Harper sitting together. He hides under a bed and listens to their conversation. With the exception of Sid, they all talk about how much they miss the boys and wish they ha...

    The boys find turtle eggs on the sandbar that afternoon and eat fried eggs for supper that night and for breakfast the following morning. They strip naked, swim, and have wrestling matches and a mock circus on the beach. Homesickness mounts, however, and Tom finds himself writing “BECKY” in the sand. Joe suggests again that they return home, and th...

    Back in the village, everyone remains in deep mourning. Becky Thatcher regrets her coldness toward Tom, and their schoolmates remember feeling awful premonitions the last time they saw the boys. The next day, Sunday, everyone gathers for the funeral. The minister gives a flattering sermon about the boys, and the congregation wonders how they could ...

    At earlier points in the novel, Tom’s melodramatic self-pity leads him to wish he were dead so that his persecutors would be miserable and sorry for having treated him so unkindly. By running away, he realizes this fantasy to die temporarily and see the reactions of those he has left behind. Ultimately, instead of being a chance to escape adults, t...

  3. Free summary and analysis of Chapter 17 in Mark Twain's The Adventures of Tom Sawyer that won't make you snore. We promise.

  4. Aunt Polly smothers Tom with affection; she even embraces Huck Finn. The minister leads the congregation with hymns of praise. For the rest of the day, Tom receives more "cuffs and kisses" than he has received in a year. At school, Tom has become a great hero, and the young children follow him about in a sort of adoration.

  5. Chapter 17 Summary. That night at midnight, Joe wakes up with the feeling that something is wrong. He awakens the others, who agree that the air feels strange.

  6. Summary. In St. Petersburg, Becky, the Harpers, and Aunt Polly are mourning. The boys' funeral is planned for Sunday, and Becky is regretting her rejection of Tom and the andiron knob "to remember him by." On Sunday the boys arrive in the village and walk into the church for their own funeral.

  7. Summary Chapter 17. In town, the boys are missed by everyone. Tom and Joe’s families are in mourning. Becky Thatcher wishes she had kept the doorknob to have something to remember Tom by. The children reminisce about the boys, seeing omens now of their early deaths. Those who saw the boys last are envied. Sunday church service is mournful.

  1. People also search for